Itâs all just so octo-licious
The octo-spectacle just wonât go away.
And instead of running from the limelight, Octomom Nadya Suleman and her zany cast of characters have thrust themselves head-on into the circling, hungry maw of the 24/7 cable-radio-Internet-Twitter news cycle.
Sulemanâs media juggernaut reached new highs this week, starting Monday with her ex-boyfriend, who tearfully went on national TV to demand a paternity test. It continued Tuesday with her father on âThe Oprah Winfrey Show,â accusing his daughter of being âirresponsible.â At one point, questioning his daughterâs mental state, asked the talk show queen, âWill you help?â Winfrey told him she would arrange for a mental evaluation if his daughter wanted it.
But it didnât stop there.
Radar unleashed videos online over four days, including tours of the familyâs cramped house and a âvideo showdownâ between Suleman and her mother. At one point, Angela Suleman called her daughter âobsessive compulsive.â Sister programs âEntertainment Tonightâ and âThe Insiderâ touted their own âexclusive,â also stretching their shared interview out over five days.
Dr. Phil devoted Wednesday and Thursday to octomania -- he now totals five episodes in two weeks -- and managed to curry enough favor with Suleman to become her confidant: When Kaiser Permanente hospital officials questioned her ability to take care of the octuplets, he was the doctor she called in distress.
Never one to shun the media glare, celebrity attorney Gloria Allred entered the fray, offering Suleman a house and 24-hour nursing care for the octuplets. And two porn studios made dueling overtures: Vivid Entertainment offered Suleman up to $1 million to star in a movie, while Pink Visual said it would give her a yearâs worth of diapers to turn down Vivid.
âYou canât point to a TV show right now that has a better plot than Octomom,â said Janice Min, editor in chief of Us Weekly, which features Suleman on its current cover with an eight-page spread inside. âWe have someone who is living her own national reality show for the cameras. . . . The story has every element that scripted TV would die for. Dysfunctional family. Public feuding with the mother. . . . The plastic surgery. The Angelina Jolie comparisons. . . . Now thereâs a baby-daddy mystery.â
TMZ Managing Editor Harvey Levin is more blunt. âOctomom is crazy. People like crazy. Crazy is more interesting than boring. Itâs that simple.â
Sulemanâs celebrity status is the product of the round-the-clock news cycle. The messy details of Sulemanâs family life have propelled her to even greater fame and at least some measure of fortune, rather than making people turn away.
âLindsay and Britney are not on the front burner, so now we have Nadya,â said Howard Bragman, the Hollywood publicist and author of âWhereâs My Fifteen Minutes?â âItâs a pure escapist story. . . . Itâs a freaky story. And by the way, it happened in Southern California, where every entertainment outlet in the world has a crew.â
Sulemanâs plight has continued to capture the publicâs imagination, in part because each day has revealed another increasingly wacky twist. Interest in a genuinely rare event, only the second octuplet birth in U.S. history, quickly turned from a legitimate debate over medical ethics into a full-blown tabloid drama.
First, it was revealed that she already had six other children. Then, it turned out she is a single mom on public assistance living in a home being foreclosed on. She used in vitro fertilization to get pregnant with all 14 kids. Her sperm donor remains a mystery, and her elusive Beverly Hills doctor may be the only one still keeping his mouth shut. The uncanny resemblance to Angelina Jolie (the full lips, the growing brood) added another puzzling element. Many have claimed she had plastic surgery to make herself look more like Jolie, a charge she denies.
Even the neighbors are making news. One frustrated, shotgun-wielding resident of Sulemanâs Whittier block burst out of his home this week shouting at the media congregated outside.
âJust when you think youâve had enough of her, another tidbit comes out to keep you hooked,â Min said.
Suleman has repeatedly said she doesnât want all the publicity. But itâs her -- and her parents -- who have kept the story unfolding.
Instead of shuttering themselves away, the family has agreed to so-called exclusive after exclusive.
âPeople are always complaining about the paparazzi, but if you really want to keep your life private, you can keep your life private,â said Elayne Rapping, a professor of American studies at the State University of New York at Buffalo who specializes in pop culture.
In a world of gossip blogs and YouTube, the public is also helping to keep the story alive.
More than 50 Facebook groups have been formed, pro and con. Bloggers of all types are sounding off. And anyone with an opinion can leave a message in response to one of the many newspaper articles or television segments focusing on Suleman and the octuplets.
Some pop culture experts agree that Suleman has become a lightning rod for peopleâs rage and frustration. But unlike the complex world of finance and bailouts, what Suleman has done is easy to grasp -- if not to understand.
âNo one is as angry at Citibank, Merrill Lynch, the problems with Wall Street,â Min said. âThey are angry at the Octomom.â
Some also speculate that Octomom, like Michael Jackson and Paris Hilton before her, are bringing us together.
âThis is what you can talk about around the water cooler or in the waiting room of the hospital,â Rapping said. âItâs what we have in common. Itâs what we share as a culture now. The interesting thing about celebrity gossip is that if this was 100 years ago, this wouldnât be all over the media. It would be actually the people who lived in her neighborhood. Theyâd be talking about her plenty. Theyâd be hating her. But now the whole world is hating her, and sheâs eating it up.â
No matter that sheâs not a movie star or runway model. Todayâs celebrities need only do something unusual enough to gain notoriety, Rapping said.
But Suleman said she does not relish the media attention.
âIâm not a celebrity,â she told Dr. Phil. âIâm no one special.â
--